What Does an Appellate Attorney Do?

An appellate attorney reviewing a motion.

If you’ve lost a court case — or won one that’s now being challenged — you may be asking yourself whether you need an appellate attorney and, more fundamentally, what an appellate attorney actually does. The answer matters, because appellate law is a distinct specialty that operates very differently from the trial courts most people are familiar with.

At Lotus Appellate Law, we represent clients before the Utah Court of Appeals and the Utah Supreme Court. This guide is designed to help both individuals navigating an appeal and attorneys seeking to understand appellate practice in Utah.

Appellate Attorneys vs. Trial Attorneys: A Critical Distinction

Most people envision attorneys questioning witnesses, presenting evidence, and arguing before a jury. That’s trial work. Appellate practice is something else entirely.

Once a trial court issues a judgment, the record is closed. No new evidence is introduced on appeal. Instead, an appellate attorney’s job is to scrutinize what already happened — reviewing transcripts, filings, and the trial court’s rulings — to determine whether a legal error occurred and whether that error affected the outcome.

❝  Appellate attorneys don’t retry cases. They identify and argue legal errors that affected a party’s rights.  ❞

This distinction matters practically. If you’ve had a trial attorney represent you through the verdict or final order, appellate work typically requires a different skill set: deep legal research, mastery of appellate procedure, and the ability to write and argue at a high level of legal sophistication.

Core Responsibilities of an Appellate Attorney

So what does an appellate attorney actually do day to day? The work centers on three core tasks:

1. Reviewing the Trial Record. An appellate attorney begins by carefully reviewing everything from the lower court proceedings — transcripts, exhibits, motions, orders, and the final judgment. The goal is to identify preserved legal issues: errors in how the law was applied, evidentiary rulings, jury instructions, constitutional violations, or procedural mistakes that materially impacted the outcome.

2. Writing Appellate Briefs. The appellate brief is the cornerstone of any appeal. It presents the legal arguments in written form, supported by statutes, case law, and constitutional provisions. In Utah, appellate briefs must comply with strict formatting and content rules set by the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure. A well-crafted brief is persuasive, precise, and logically structured — it tells the court not just what went wrong, but why it matters and what should happen as a result.

3. Presenting Oral Argument. In many appeals, attorneys appear before a panel of judges to argue their positions in person. Unlike trial advocacy, oral argument in appellate court is a dialogue — judges ask probing questions and expect attorneys to respond with both precision and depth. It requires command of the record, the law, and the ability to think on your feet.

What Skills Define Effective Appellate Attorneys?

Appellate practice rewards a specific combination of legal talents. The most effective appellate attorneys excel at:

  • Legal research and issue-spotting — identifying which errors are worth raising and which are not
  • Persuasive writing — crafting briefs that are clear, well-organized, and compelling to appellate judges
  • Oral advocacy — articulating complex legal arguments concisely under judicial questioning
  • Strategic judgment — advising clients honestly about the strength of an appeal and the realistic outcomes

This last point is often underappreciated. A good appellate attorney doesn’t just pursue every possible argument — they identify the strongest issues and present them with focus and credibility.

When Do You Need an Appellate Attorney in Utah?

Knowing when to consult an appellate attorney — and doing so early — can be the difference between a viable appeal and a waived one. In Utah, deadlines for filing a notice of appeal are strict and generally non-extendable. Missing them forfeits the right to appeal entirely.

You should consider consulting an appellate attorney if:

  • A trial court has entered a judgment or order against you that you believe was legally incorrect
  • You are a prevailing party whose judgment is being challenged on appeal
  • You received an adverse ruling on a motion that significantly impacts your case
  • You are a referring attorney whose client needs specialized appellate representation

❝  Utah’s Notice of Appeal must generally be filed within 30 days of a final judgment in civil cases. Don’t wait to explore your options.  ❞

Utah Appellate Practice: A Snapshot

Appeals in Utah move through a defined court structure. Most civil and criminal appeals from district courts go first to the Utah Court of Appeals, a nine-judge intermediate appellate court. Cases involving significant constitutional questions or matters of first impression may be transferred to — or granted certiorari by — the Utah Supreme Court.

The appellate process in Utah involves distinct procedural stages: filing the notice of appeal, designating the record, briefing, potential oral argument, and ultimately a written decision from the court. Each stage has its own deadlines and requirements under the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure.

Lotus Appellate Law focuses exclusively on this work — meaning our attorneys are not balancing trial calendars, depositions, or client intake alongside appellate deadlines. Appellate practice is all we do.

The Broader Impact of Appellate Decisions

Appellate work isn’t just about winning or losing a single case. Appellate court decisions establish binding precedent that shapes how Utah law is interpreted and applied going forward. A successful appeal can clarify unsettled law, correct systemic errors, and influence outcomes in future cases well beyond the parties directly involved.

This is one reason appellate advocacy carries significant responsibility — and why it demands attorneys who are not only skilled advocates but careful, intellectually rigorous legal thinkers.

Consult with a Utah Appellate Attorney

If you’re facing an appeal — or wondering whether one is worth pursuing — the attorneys at Lotus Appellate Law are here to help. We work with both individual clients and referring attorneys throughout Utah, providing focused, experienced appellate representation at every level of Utah’s court system.

Contact us today to discuss your case and learn whether an appeal makes sense for your situation.